| Literature DB >> 34681019 |
Elana Meer1, Tomas S Aleman1,2, Ahmara G Ross1,2.
Abstract
WDR36 is one of a number of genes implicated in the pathogenesis of adult-onset primary open angle glaucoma (POAG). Here we describe in detail the phenotype of a patient with pathogenic variation in WDR36 who presented with a protracted history of central vision loss. On exam visual acuities were at 20/100 level, had a tritan color defect and showed central arcuate visual field defects on visual field testing. Enlarged cup-to-disk ratios with normal intraocular pressures were associated with severe thinning of the ganglion cell layer (GCL) and retinal nerve fiber layer consistent with a clinical diagnosis of normal tension glaucoma. Full-field electroretinograms revealed a severe inner retinal dysfunction with reduced amplitudes and remarkably delayed timings of the b-wave, but preserved photoreceptor (a-wave) function. The pattern described herein recapitulates some of the findings of an animal model of WDR36-associated POAG and suggests a mechanism of disease that involves a retina-wide inner retinal dysfunction and neurodegeneration beyond the GCL. Further detailed structural and functional characterizations of patients with a pathogenic variant in the WDR36 gene are required to confirm these findings.Entities:
Keywords: WDR36; ganglion cell layer; low tension glaucoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34681019 PMCID: PMC8536154 DOI: 10.3390/genes12101624
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Demonstrating patients extensive blood work up for nutritional and common genetic causes of optic neuropathy. Blood work up for inflammatory, genetic, and reversible optic neuropathies with normal and patient values.
| Lab Test Name | Normal Values | Patient Values |
|---|---|---|
| C Reactive Protein (CRP) | <8.0 mg/L | 6.2 mg/L |
| B12 | 160–950 pg/mL | 812 pg/mL |
| Folate | 2.7–17.0 ng/mL | 16.8 ng/mL |
| Methylmalonic acid | 87–318 nmol/L | 251 nmol/L |
| Homocysteine | <11.4 μmol/L | 11.4 μmol/L |
|
| Associated mutation 2826delT | No mutations |
|
| Associated mutations (mt.3460G > A, mt.11778G > A, and mt.14484T > C) | No mutations |
Figure 1En face retinal imaging demonstrating retinal findings. (A). A color fundus photography photomontage shows a normal blonde fundus. (B) A magnified image of the central retina demonstrates small faintly depigmented round lesions (green arrows) near the foveal center. (C,D). Fundus autofluorescence imaging using near-infrared (NIR-FAF) (C) and short-wavelength (SW-FAF) (D) excitation lights. Arrows on the NIR-FAF image (C) points to round dark, hypo-autofluorescent, depigmented lesions; SW-FAF image (D) is within normal limits. Only right eye shown for clarity, left eye had similar findings.
Figure 2Optic nerve and retinal photography by OCT demonstrating vertical optic nerve atrophy with associated thinning in the retinal ganglion cell layer. SD−OCT of the peripapillary and central retina in the WDR36-positive patient. (A) SD−OCT of the peripapillary retina in the patient. Sides (left and right columns) are plots of the topography of the peripapillary RNFL thickness as raw thickness values (top row) and as deviation maps (second row) compared to a normative database for the right (left panels) and left (right panels) eyes of the patient. The bottom three rows of panels below are horizontal (top) and vertical (middle) cross-sections SD−OCT scans through the optic nerve, as well as circular scans cross-sectional tomograms around the optic nerve. The middle column is summary parameters. (B) SD−OCT of the central and pericentral retina in the patient. Top panels are topographic maps of the GCL thickness (there are segmentation artifacts shown as localized thickened GCL in the left eye). Bottom panels are GCL thickness summary parameters compared to a normal distribution database.
Figure 3Detailed functional and structural phenotyping of the WDR36-positive patient using color vision and perimetric functional analysis, followed by electrophysiology. Only one eye is shown for clarity; results are nearly identical in the contralateral eye. (A) Left panel: color vision documented with a Farnsworth–Munsell D15 test; middle panel: Goldman kinetic perimetry to three stimulus conditions (V-4e, III-4e and I-4e); right panel: dark-adapted (>30 min), fully dilated fundus perimetry or microperimetry (MAIA, CenterVue, Padova, Italy) from our patient. Sensitivities are shown as numerical values next to the testing (a 68 point, conventional ‘10-2 protocol’ grid), as well as color-coded sensitivity losses compared to a normative database (green symbols, ≥25 dB, considered a rough lower limit of normal across the grid). Blue-green traces near the center portray prefer locus and fixation excursions. (B) Standard electroretinography elicited using a commercially available system (Espion e3, Diagnosys LLC, Lowell, MA, USA). Standard full-field electroretinograms (ffERGs) recorded in scotopic (left panel) and photopic (middle) conditions, as well as multifocal electroretinograms (mERG) (right) across the central 20 degrees are shown. ff-ERGs from the patient overlap representative normal responses, gray traces. m-ERG traces in the patient, black traces, are also compared to average normal traces (red). Mixed cone-rod response is elicited with a standard flash (nominal 3.0 setting of standard). A magnified comparison from a parafoveal location is shown to the bottom right to illustrate a perfect match of the photoreceptor a-wave component which contrasts with the inner retina, b-wave, component. (C) Horizontal SD-OCT (Spectralis, Heidelberg Engineering, Heidelberg, Germany) through the foveal center in the patient compared to a representative normal subject. Nuclear layers are labeled: outer nuclear layer = ONL, inner nuclear layer = INL, ganglion cell layer = GCL. Outer retinal sublaminae are labeled as: 1. Outer limiting membrane (OLM), 2. Inner segment ellipsoid band (EZ), 3. Interdigitation of the photoreceptor outer segment tip with the apical RPE (IZ), 4. Retinal pigment epithelium and Bruch’s membrane (RPE/BrM). A longitudinal reflectivity profile is shown overlapping the cross section, 2 mm in nasal retina. Colored segments denote the extent of the signal trough that corresponds to the ONL (blue), the INL (pink), and the GCL (green). Arrow points to a thinned GCL, asterisk denotes incidental pigment epithelial detachment in the temporal juxtafovea. T, temporal retina. N, nasal retina.